![is 23.976 equal to 1080p or 720p is 23.976 equal to 1080p or 720p](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0095/4332/files/optimal_bitrate2_grande.jpg)
What I don't quite understand is neither of the standard 16:9 resolutions support anything other 60hz, but at 1360x768 I can actually get 72Hz or at 1600x900 I can get either 70Hz or 75Hz.
![is 23.976 equal to 1080p or 720p is 23.976 equal to 1080p or 720p](https://www.picclickimg.com/d/l400/pict/194264747421_/Canon-PowerShot-SX510-HS-121MP-Appareil-photo-numérique.jpg)
I always thought my TV only supported 60hz from a PC but it seems if I drop the resolution I can change the refresh rate.
![is 23.976 equal to 1080p or 720p is 23.976 equal to 1080p or 720p](https://fr.reneelab.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2019/01/ecran-4k.png)
Thanks to this thread I got curious about refresh rates and as I use a PC for playback I started playing with the resolution. So yeah I guess there is kinda a special judder free setting for you. 1360x768 is only supported in PC mode and only at 60hz.
#IS 23.976 EQUAL TO 1080P OR 720P MANUAL#
"This feature operates only in TV, AV and Component 480i/576i/1080i mode."Ī bit further on in the manual it actually lists 24 and 23.97 as supported refresh rates in HDMI(DTV) mode at 1920x1080, but 1360x768 isn't a supported resolution in HDMI mode. I had a look at the manual which is typically uninformative and basically all it says about film mode is The TV (32LG2000 HD Ready not FullHD) doesn't support 24p mode in 1360*768, if i change resolution to 1920*1080 i have the option to choose 24 Hz refresh rate. So, you can either triple the fps and feed it at 1360x768 (however no commercial video has such a frame size) or keep it at 24fps and either do yourself an upscaling or let the TV do it for you.